Rush Limbaugh’s declaration that Georgetown Law student Sandra Fluke is a “prostitute” and a “slut” who should video herself having sex and post the tapes on the Internet because she thinks insurance plans should cover contraception is the latest flash point between these two groups (“[W]e want something in return, Ms. Fluke: And that would be the videos of all this sex posted online so we can see what we are getting for our money” … the man knows his audience!)

Rush Limbaugh faced rising pressure from critics who are using new media to keep advertisers away from his long-running radio show.

At least 10 companies, including online publisher AOL Inc. (AOL), have dropped the most-popular U.S. talk-radio show after Limbaugh called Georgetown University law student Sandra Fluke a “prostitute” and a “slut.” Fluke appeared before Congress on Feb. 23 to speak in favor of President Barack Obama’s policy requiring insurers to provide birth control to women.

Much of the pressure on advertisers has come from online activists using Twitter and Facebook to mobilize against Limbaugh. They see undermining the program’s economic viability as the way to force distributor Clear Channel Communications Inc.’s Premiere Radio Networks to stop syndicating the show.

“The tactic of just asking advertisers has been a very successful one,” said Krystal Ball, a 30-year-old MSNBC commentator who started a website called boycottrush.org. “So as long as that is successful, we’ll continue.”

Ball, a Democrat, ran unsuccessfully for Congress in 2010. The campaign targeting Limbaugh is led by groups like Media Matters for America and the Ohio Democratic Party.

“The social media world has really exploded,” said Terry O’Neill, president of the National Organization for Women. “I think Rush Limbaugh is going to go down over this.”

MSNBC has suspended Ed Schultz for one week after he called fellow radio talker Laura Ingraham a “slut” twice on his radio show yesterday.

“Like this right-wing slut Laura Ingraham… yeah, she’s a talk slut,” said Schultz who was critical of Ingraham’s take on President Obama drinking a beer in Ireland just hours after part of Joplin, MO was decimated by a tornado.

JohnD, faced with the perhaps unbearable fact that advertisers are, at long last, running screaming from Rush Limbaugh, tries the classic MA GOP gambit: “Hey, look over there! A Democrat did something once!”

In this case, as others have noted, it’s a total failure, since Schultz (a) actually apologized and was punished by a week-long suspension, and (b) as relevant to this post, was simply reporting facts about the number of advertisers that have bailed on Rush – which is now up to 34, according to ThinkProgress.

Remember the whole “civility” thing where we were all going to be more civil in our discourse? That ended when Democrats couldn’t stop the name calling so Dems, even BMGers, started to defend Dems who attacked Republicans with names.

Rush is a dope and certainly someone I don’t listen to nor would I ever take advice from him. If we have standard then let’s apply them to everyone and when they break them we can castigate them, no matter what party they support. Isn’t that fair?

And please drop the “my guy really apologized while your guy just said he was sorry”… please!

… have a discussion about a misbehaving Republican without it devolving into a truly petty argument about who else misbehaved?

Rush behaved badly. Repeatedly. Again and again. What do you have to say about THAT misbehaviour…. ? And THAT misbehaviour alone…?

After we get THAT out of the way, maybe we’ll talk about OTHER instances of misbehaviour. But I’m not gonna compare anything… I’m simply asking, in toto, and without reference to ANBODY elses behavior, what do you think about RUSH LIMBAUGH?

For Breitbart, that legacy is the media landscape that greets those same hipsters and professionals whenever they settle into their local coffee shop and fire up their laptop or iPhone. Breitbart’s politics were right-wing, but his digital media achievements were entirely bipartisan.

Klan-watchers … suspect that the nation’s oldest domestic terrorist organization is indeed struggling to keep pace with other racist hate groups. Young racists tend to think of the Klan as their grandfathers’ hate group, and of its members as rural, uneducated, and technologically unsophisticated. The Klan doesn’t seem to have used the web and social media as well as its competitors.